Proteins are manufactured by ribosomes-macromolecular complexes of protein and RNA molecules that are assembled within major nuclear compartments called nucleoli 1,2. Existing models suggest that RNA polymerases I and III (Pol I and Pol III) are the only enzymes that directly mediate the expression of the ribosomal RNA (rRNA) components of ribosomes. Here we show, however, that RNA polymerase II (Pol II) inside human nucleoli operates near genes encoding rRNAs to drive their expression. Pol II, assisted by the neurodegeneration-associated enzyme senataxin, generates a shield comprising triplex nucleic acid structures known as R-loops at intergenic spacers flanking nucleolar rRNA genes. The shield prevents Pol I from producing sense intergenic noncoding RNAs (sincRNAs) that can disrupt nucleolar organization and rRNA expression. These disruptive sincRNAs can be unleashed by Pol II inhibition, senataxin loss, Ewing sarcoma or locus-associated R-loop repression through an experimental system involving the proteins RNaseH1, eGFP and dCas9 (which we refer to as 'red laser'). We reveal a nucleolar Pol-II-dependent mechanism that drives ribosome biogenesis, identify disease-associated disruption of nucleoli by noncoding RNAs, and establish locus-targeted R-loop modulation. Our findings revise theories of labour division between the major RNA polymerases, and identify nucleolar Pol II as a major factor in protein synthesis and nuclear organization, with potential implications for health and disease. Various proteins self-organize via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) into nucleolar subdomains, which are needed for highly stereotyped ribosome assembly 1,2. At fibrillar centres in the heart of mammalian nucleoli, the major rRNA molecules needed to assemble ribosomes are generated by Pol-I-dependent transcription of rRNA genes within ribosomal DNA (rDNA) repeats 1,3. Within rDNA, rRNA genes are separated by large intergenic spacers (IGSs) (Extended Data Fig. 1a). At nucleolar rRNA genes, Pol I synthesizes precursor rRNAs (pre-rRNAs) that are processed into mature 28S, 18S and 5.8S rRNA molecules as they migrate to the granular component at the nucleolar periphery. Outside nucleoli, Pol III synthesizes 5S rRNA molecules that are targeted to nucleoli for processing. Mature rRNAs are packaged into 40S and 60S ribosomal subunits for export to the cytoplasm. Traditionally, the nucleolar Pol I and nucleoplasmic Pol III are viewed as the sole mammalian RNA polymerases that directly mediate housekeeping ribosome biogenesis. Interestingly, in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Pol II is physically enriched at rDNA IGSs, but this phenomenon is deleterious because it drives ageing without affecting rRNA expression 3-5. It is unclear whether nucleolar Pol II exists in higher organisms or directly promotes ribosome biogenesis in any species. Active Pol II at rDNA IGSs To investigate whether Pol II exists within human nucleoli, we first used immunofluorescence coupled to super-resolution microscopy. Within nucleoli, which we...
Arginine methylation modulates diverse cellular processes and represents a molecular signature of germ-line-specific Piwi family proteins. A subset of Tudor domains recognize arginine methylation modifications, but the binding mechanism has been lacking. Here we establish that, like other germ-line Tudor proteins, the ancestral staphylococcal nuclease domain-containing 1 (SND1) polypeptide is expressed and associates with PIWIL1/Miwi in germ cells. We find that human SND1 binds PIWIL1 in an arginine methylation-dependent manner with a preference for symmetrically dimethylated arginine. The entire Tudor domain and a bifurcated SN domain are required for this binding activity, whereas the canonical Tudor domain alone is insufficient for methylarginine ligand binding. Crystal structures show that the intact SND1 extended Tudor domain forms a wide and negatively charged binding groove, which can accommodate distinct symmetrically dimethylated arginine peptides from PIWIL1 in different orientations. This analysis explains how SND1 preferentially recognizes symmetrical dimethylarginine via an aromatic cage and conserved hydrogen bonds, and provides a general paradigm for the binding mechanisms of methylargininecontaining peptides by extended Tudor domains.Piwi-interacting RNA | Tudor domain-containing proteins
The Cutoff protein regulates piRNA cluster expression and piRNA production in the Drosophila germlineThe identity and function of many factors involved in the piRNA pathway remain unknown. Here, in Drosophila, cutoff plays a role in regulating piRNA cluster transcript levels and biogenesis together with the heterochromatin protein Rhino.
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